The Oklahoman

Many insurers just won’t touch legal pot

- BY BRIAN LOUIS

Marijuana is already a multibilli­on-dollar business in the U.S. that’s drawing attention from some lawmakers eager for tax revenue and investors looking for profits. So far, however, some of the biggest insurers are taking a pass.

Allianz, Hartford Financial Services and Nationwide Mutual Insurance are among large insurers that aren’t covering marijuana-related businesses. Even as U.S. states increasing­ly permit the use of pot for medicinal or recreation­al purposes, the federal government has held fast in keeping weed illegal. That’s driven off name-brand insurers and left the field open for smaller firms.

“The whole conversati­on of cannabis crosses the desks of the most senior leaders of the insurance community as they determine whether or not they want to play in this game,” said Tom Fitzgerald, global brokering officer at insurance broker Aon PLC. “There’s not every insurance company in the world anxious to write this stuff, at least not yet.”

Pot is big business, with consumer spending on legal cannabis estimated to reach $11 billion this year and $23 billion by 2022, according to a June report by Arcview Market Research with BDS Analytics.

Recreation­al use of marijuana is now legal in nine states and Washington, D.C., while medicinal weed is permitted in more than 25 states and the nation’s capital, according to the National Conference of State Legislator­s.

“Just a few handful of carriers” will write policies for cannabis-related firms, said James Nelson, a retail insurance broker and owner of New Growth Insurance in Alameda, California.

Growers want protection against crop loss and other business coverage, and weed distributo­rs and retailers need insurance as well. The companies have long known that U.S. banks won’t let them open accounts because of the federal law, and now they’re finding it difficult to buy insurance.

‘A great deal of potential’

One of the smaller firms diving in is Continenta­l Heritage Insurance Co. Ohio-based Continenta­l, which also sells surety products like bail bonds, was licensed this year in California to offer coverage for marijuana-related businesses, including product liability.

“We have a history of basically seeking out markets that a lot of the larger companies tend to ignore,” said Continenta­l CEO Charles Hamm. “We believe cannabis is one of those areas that has a great deal of potential.”

The fear of the federal government stepping in is overblown, according to Dave Jones, the California insurance commission­er. Recreation­al pot became legal in California, the biggest U.S. state, this year.

“There’s no risk of federal interventi­on and a very important upside for the insurance industry to participat­e,” Jones said in an interview. Marijuana is “a very large and growing industry that needs insurance.”

Hartford, based in the Connecticu­t city of the same name, said it’s abstaining from the industry, and “that is unlikely to change” while the federal ban is in place.

“We do not underwrite any business that sells, grows, transports or distribute­s marijuana or products derived from marijuana cannabinoi­ds,” the company said in an emailed statement.

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